Google May Reverse Course And Launch a Restricted Google Search in China

Google is working on a censored version of its Google search engine to launch in China if the Chinese government approves it, according to The Intercept.
The modified version will not allow access to government-blacklisted
websites or searches related to human rights, democracy, religion, or
peaceful protest.

Most internet users in China cannot currently access Google Search. The utility is blocked by China’s “Great Firewall.”

Citing internal Google documents and people
knowledgeable of the company’s plans who are not authorized to speak for
the company and who wish to remain anonymous, The Intercept reports
Google has already demonstrated a version of the limited search engine
to the Chinese government. The censored version restricts access to
content Chinese President Xi Jinping’s Communist Party considers
“unfavorable.”

The Intercept claims to have seen documents
marked “Google confidential” which detail the filtering in the Chinese
version of the search app. All websites blocked by the Great Firewall
will be identified and filtered. If a search would bring up a banned
website, such as the BBC or Wikipedia websites, the site will be blocked
from the first results page along with a disclaimer that states, “some
results may have been removed due to statutory requirements.”

Also, blacklisted words and phrases used in queries with the Chinese
Google version won’t return any results. The same filtering will work
with all features of Google’s search engine, including image searching,
spell checking, and search recommendations.
Only a few hundred Google employees know about the modified search
engine, according to The Intercept’s sources. Code-named “Dragonfly,”
teams of Google engineers and programmers have been working on the
project since the spring of 2017. Early versions of the custom Android
app were named “Maotai” and “Longfei.”
Google’s search engine hasn’t been available to most people in China since 2010. In March 2010 Google announced it would no longer censor Google Search, Google News, and Google Images on Google.cn, a
practice it had followed since 2000. At the time Google cited
limitations on free speech, blocked websites, email surveillance, and
cyber attacks as reasons for pulling the filtered version. Google was
also taking heat from the U.S. Congress for complying with the Chinese
government’s policies.
In 2016, after taking over as Google’s new CEO the previous October,
Pinchai said at a conference in California, “I care about servicing
users globally in every corner. Google is for everyone. We want to be in
China serving Chinese users.”
Sources with knowledge of the project told The Intercept that
development of Dragonfly sped up after Google CEO Sundar Pichai met with
a high-level Chinese government official last December.
According to The Intercept, “The source said that they had moral and
ethical concerns about Google’s role in the censorship, which is being
planned by a handful of top executives and managers at the company with
no public scrutiny.”
If the Chinese government approves the censored Google Search version
and if the company is confident the search engine will perform better
than Baidu, currently the dominant search service in China, then Google
will launch the Dragonfly search app, according to The Intercept’s
sources.